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Turkey’s massive military, trade, Islamic diplomacy and education expansion into Africa is, some analysts say, undermining U.S. goals, as Ankara capitalizes on wars and conflicts on the continent.

Experts claim Turkey’s military sales appear to be based on maximizing profit, without worrying about what the arms sold do to the balance of power, particularly in Jihadist areas such as the Sahel.

Recently, multiple reports claimed Turkish companies have sold military drones to both sides in the 3-year-long conflict in Sudan.

‘Turkey is really capitalizing on all these conflicts in Sudan, in Ethiopia, in Somalia, to strengthen its military presence, its diplomatic and economic engagements,’ Turkey analyst Gönül Tol, told an American Enterprise Institute seminar in Washington last week. Tol, founding director of the Middle East Institute’s Turkey program, added that the country is ‘one of the top, top weapons providers to Africa. So if there is more chaos, that will only help Erdogan strengthen his hands.’

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, stated in October that overall trade volume with the African continent has shot up from $5.4 billion in 2003, to $41 billion in 2024. He told a business and economic forum in Istanbul that the state-backed carrier Turkish Airlines is literally leading the way into African countries for Turkish companies, now flying to 64 African destinations.

Erdogan told the forum that over the past two decades, ‘we have advanced our relations hand in hand, shoulder to shoulder, and most importantly, heart-to-heart, to a level that could not even be imagined.’

Drone sales to Sudan’s warring partners would only prolong the war, conduct which is directly against U.S. policy. Just last month, a State Department spokesperson told Fox News Digital that ‘the U.S. is working with allies and others to bring an end to external military support to the parties, which is fueling the violence.’

‘Turkish drones, marketed as cost-effective and politically low-friction alternatives to U.S. or European systems, have proliferated across African conflict zones,’ Mariam Wahba, research analyst at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, told Fox News Digital.

‘Reporting that Turkish firms supplied drones to both the Sudanese (government) Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces (the opposing militia in the conflict) underscores Ankara’s transactional approach: access and influence take precedence over stability, civilian protection or alignment with Western policy objectives,’ she said.

In a 2025 FDD report, Sinan Siddi, senior fellow and director of the organization’s Turkey Program, wrote, ‘The deal between Baykar and SAF is worth $120 million, resulting in the sale of six TB2 drones, three ground control stations, and 600 warheads.’  Siddi claimed the deal took place after the U.S. placed sanctions on such sales.

Although Turkish drones are also claimed to have been sold to Sudan’s RSF militia, the company said to have been involved is reported to have publicly denied making the sale. The company did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

A State Department spokesperson, when asked by Fox News Digital about the allegations said, ‘We refer you to the Government of Turkey for comment on reports related to any Turkish firms operating in Sudan.’

Fox News Digital reached out to the Turkish government but received no response.

The TB2 drone reportedly sold to the Sudanese government is made by a company said to be owned by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s son-in-law. Experts say the TB2 is one-sixth the cost of a U.S. Reaper drone. Fox News Digital reached out to the company, but received no response.

The U.S. Africa Command’s Africa Defense Forum recently reported it ‘typically costs between $2 million and $5 million per aircraft, though total system packages — including ground control stations, communication systems, and training — often cost significantly more, sometimes reaching $5–$15 million per system depending on the contract. The TB2 is recognized for its high cost-efficiency, with operational costs estimated at only a few hundred dollars per hour.’

Particularly in Africa’s Sahel region, the FDD’s Wahba claimed Turkey is trying to return to the principles of its Ottoman Empire, which ruled for centuries and promoted the culture of imposing caliphates – areas where Islamic law is strictly enforced.

Wahba said, ‘On the whole, this is a worrying development that risks undermining U.S. interests. In addition to backing Islamist movements such as Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood, which does not bode well for its ideological orientation, Ankara is pursuing a neo-Ottoman foreign policy that is already taking concrete shape across parts of Africa.’ 

‘Turkey’s arms sales across Africa are best understood’, the FDD’s Siddi told Fox News Digital, ‘not as ad hoc commercial transactions, but as a deliberate strategy to expand Ankara’s political, military and economic footprint on a continent increasingly contested by global and middle powers.’

He said, ‘By exporting drones, small arms and security services to fragile states such as Sudan… the Erdogan government positions Turkey as a low-cost, low-conditionality alternative to Western partners, while simultaneously opening new markets for its rapidly growing defense industry. These weapons transfers are designed to buy diplomatic leverage, secure access to ports, bases and contracts and cultivate client relationships with regimes and militias that can advance Turkey’s regional ambitions.’

The number of embassies Turkey operates in Africa has rocketed from 12 in 2002, to 44 today. Wahba said the 64 African destinations Turkish Airlines flies to is a useful indicator. ‘As a state-backed carrier, its rapid expansion of direct routes into African capitals mirrors Turkey’s diplomatic and security priorities. The airline functions as a soft-power and access enabler for Ankara’s broader agenda.’

Wahba claimed this all should matter for Washington, ‘because Ankara’s model increasingly competes with, and in many cases directly undercuts, U.S. priorities on conflict mitigation and stability.’

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Athletes from more than 90 countries will compete for Winter Olympic medals in 116 events over 16 days, and USA TODAY is keeping a tally of every nation finishing on the podium. Here’s a look at the latest medal standings on the morning of Sunday, Feb. 22, as well as when each medal event will take place.

USA TODAY Sports has a team of more than a dozen journalists on the ground in Italy to bring you behind the scenes with Team USA and keep you up to date with every medal win, big moment and triumphant finish. Get our Chasing Gold newsletter in your inbox every morning and join our WhatsApp channel to get the latest updates right in your texts.

Broadcast coverage of the 2026 Milano Cortino Winter Olympics is airing exclusively airing across NBC’s suite of networks with many competitions airing live on its streaming service, Peacock, which you can sign up for here.

What is the medal count at the 2026 Milano Cortina Olympics?

All data accurate as of Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026, at 7:15 a.m.

Meet Team USA 2026: Get to know the athletes behind the games

  • 1. Norway: 41 Total (18 Gold, 12 Silver, 11 Bronze)
  • 2. United States: 32 Total (11 Gold, 12 Silver, 9 Bronze)
  • 3. Italy: 30 Total (10 Gold, 6 Silver, 14 Bronze)
  • 4. Germany: 26 Total (8 Gold, 10 Silver, 8 Bronze)
  • 5. Japan: 24 Total (5 Gold, 7 Silver, 12 Bronze)
  • 6. France: 23 Total (8 Gold, 9 Silver, 6 Bronze)
  • 7. Switzerland: 22 Total (6 Gold, 8 Silver, 8 Bronze)
  • 8. Netherlands: 20 Total (10 Gold, 7 Silver, 3 Bronze)
  • 8. Canada: 20 Total (5 Gold, 6 Silver, 9 Bronze)
  • 10. Austria: 18 Total (5 Gold, 8 Silver, 5 Bronze)
  • 11. Sweden: 17 Total (7 Gold, 6 Silver, 4 Bronze)
  • 12. China: 15 Total (5 Gold, 4 Silver, 6 Bronze)
  • 13. South Korea: 10 Total (3 Gold, 4 Silver, 3 Bronze)
  • 14. Australia: 6 Total (3 Gold, 2 Silver, 1 Bronze)
  • 14. Finland: 6 Total (0 Gold, 1 Silver, 5 Bronze)
  • 16. Czech Republic: 5 Total (2 Gold, 2 Silver, 1 Bronze)
  • 16. Great Britain: 5 Total (3 Gold, 1 Silver, 1 Bronze)
  • 18. Slovenia: 4 Total (2 Gold, 1 Silver, 1 Bronze)
  • 18. Poland: 4 Total (0 Gold, 3 Silver, 1 Bronze)
  • 20. Spain: 3 Total (1 Gold, 0 Silver, 2 Bronze)
  • 20. New Zealand: 3 Total (0 Gold, 2 Silver, 1 Bronze)
  • 22. Latvia: 2 Total (0 Gold, 1 Silver, 1 Bronze)
  • 22. Bulgaria: 2 Total (0 Gold, 0 Silver, 2 Bronze)
  • 24. Brazil: 1 Total (1 Gold, 0 Silver, 0 Bronze)
  • 24. Kazakhstan: 1 Total (1 Gold, 0 Silver, 0 Bronze)
  • 24. Denmark: 1 Total (0 Gold, 1 Silver, 0 Bronze)
  • 24. Estonia: 1 Total (0 Gold, 1 Silver, 0 Bronze)
  • 24. Georgia: 1 Total (0 Gold, 1 Silver, 0 Bronze)
  • 24. Individual Neutral Athletes: 1 Total (0 Gold, 1 Silver, 0 Bronze)
  • 24. Belgium: 1 Total (0 Gold, 0 Silver, 1 Bronze)

2026 Winter Olympics medal events schedule

Feb. 22

  • ICE HOCKEY: Men’s Gold Medal Game
This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Canada edged the United States in the final of the 4 Nations Face-Off last year, a tournament that was designed to whet fans’ appetite for the return of NHL players to the Winter Olympics in 2026.

A little more than a year later, the NHL-stocked 2026 Winter Olympics are down to one game, and the USA and Canada will meet again for international hockey supremacy.

Both countries, not wanting to tinker with a successful formula, have brought back most of the players from the 4 Nations. But there are some key differences in the roster and teams’ statuses. Here is a look:

Quinn Hughes is available for the USA

The mobile defenseman was hurt and couldn’t play in the 4 Nations. But he has been a standout in the Olympics, playing major minutes, moving the puck and scoring in overtime against Sweden. His brother, Jack, is thriving with Quinn on the team.

Tage Thompson has been a force

The Buffalo Sabres star wasn’t named to the 4 Nations but he made this year’s team after helping the USA win the 2025 world championships. He has been dangerous on the power play and elsewhere because of his size, speed and stickhandling. He sat out the third period of the semifinals with an injury but will play in the gold medal game.

Macklin Celebrini is a second-year wonder

He was an 18-year-old NHL rookie and wasn’t part of the 4 Nations, but he made Team Canada at 19. He’s fourth in the NHL in scoring and is playing on the top line with Connor McDavid, plus Nathan MacKinnon in the last game. He has five goals and 10 points in Milan. Nick Suzuki, another newcomer, scored to send the quarterfinal to overtime. Tom Wilson has been a physical presence who was ejected for a rare Olympics fight.

The USA is healthy this time

Charlie McAvoy was sent home early from the 4 Nations with a ‘significant’ shoulder injury. Auston Matthews and Matthew Tkachuk were held out of the third game and Brady Tkachuk left that game early. All three played in the championship game, but Matthew Tkachuk was dealing with a sports hernia and didn’t come off the bench after the second intermission. He missed the rest of the regular season, won a second Stanley Cup, then had offseason surgery.

Early this season, the USA was plagued with injury as the first six players named sat out some games, including McAvoy with a broken jaw. But everyone healed up before the Olympics and the USA team’s health seems good going into Sunday’s game. Thompson’s appearance adds to that.

Canada is having health issues

Sidney Crosby won’t play in the gold medal game, a big loss for Team Canada. He was hurt in the quarterfinals and also missed the semifinal. Defenseman Josh Morrissey is hurt and hasn’t played since the first game.

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STORRS, CT — The No. 1 UConn women’s basketball team will honor its seniors on Sunday at Gampel Pavilion.

Ice Brady, Caroline Ducharme, Azzi Fudd, Ayanna Patterson and Serah Williams will be recognized in a postgame ceremony. The Huskies have a 159-21 in the past five seasons and have appeared in three Final Fours, two national championship games with one title.

UConn (28-0, 17-0 Big East) hosts Providence (14-14, 7-10), which it defeated 90-53 on Dec. 31. The Huskies have already clinched the Big East regular-season championship and will be the No. 1 seed in the conference tournament in March.

UConn is 51-21 all-time vs. Providence and has won the last 38 meetings between the teams.

Providence has won its last four games and Sabou Gueye leads the Friars with 15.3 points a game.

What time is UConn vs. Providence?

The UConn Huskies play host to the Providence Friars at noon, Sunday, Feb. 22 at Gampel Pavilion in Storrs, Connecticut.

UConn vs. Providence: TV, streaming

  • Date: Sunday, Feb. 22
  • Time: Noon ET (9 a.m. PT)
  • Location: Gampel Pavilion in Storrs, Connecticut.
  • TV: FS1
  • Stream: Fubo

STREAM: UConn vs. Providence women’s basketball

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The USA-Canada matchup in the 2026 Winter Olympics gold-medal game is the same one as the final of last year’s 4 Nations Face-Off.

Canada won that game 3-2 in overtime. But will that happen this time?

Both teams are 5-0 in the Olympics. Both teams had to win in overtime in the quarterfinals to advance. Both are loaded with NHL scorers. Both have a physical presence. Both are getting excellent goaltending.

How will it all shake out when the puck drops at 8:10 a.m. ET (NBC, Peacock)?

USA TODAY Network staffers offer their predictions:

Mike Brehm, USA TODAY

Canada 3, USA 2 (OT): That has been the score of the 4 Nations final and the 2010 Olympics gold medal game. These teams are so evenly matched that overtime seems inevitable. Canada’s high-end talent makes the difference.

Jace Evans, USA TODAY

Canada 4, USA 2: I want to believe. I really do. But I can’t get over the fact Canada just has better players. Connor McDavid, Nathan MacKinnon and emerging star Macklin Celebrini will be the difference. 

Helene St. James, USA TODAY

USA 4, Canada 2: The USA is healthier than Canada, where even if he’s in the lineup, Sidney Crosby will be playing hurt. One could argue Canada has had the tougher path, with Czechia and Finland in elimination games, but Sweden gave the USA a push in the quarters, and the USA played its best game in routing Slovakia in the semis. The USA seems looser, and looks poised to bring an Olympic gold medal home for the first time since 1980.

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MILAN – Coach Mike Sullivan wanted his players to know what a select group they can join if they win their next game. His players emphasized the importance of enjoying the moment and not overthinking the magnitude.

It is with a blend of those two focal points as the USA hockey team enters the last game of the 2026 Winter Olympics men’s tournament on Feb. 22, facing off against rival Canada for the biggest prize in international hockey.

‘There’s 36 American-born hockey players that have gold medals,’ Sullivan said on Feb. 21. ‘What an incredible opportunity we have in front of us. That was the discussion we had, and I think these guys, they’re excited about it. We know it’s a big challenge.’

Players don’t reach the pinnacle of their sport without being mentally tough, but for all 25 NHLers on Team USA, these Games are their Olympic debut. Now here they are, playing for gold, playing for history.

‘Any time you’re in this position, you’re not playing for yourself,’ Matthew Tkachuk said. ‘You’re playing for your country. You’re playing for the guys that have come before you. You’re playing for the generation that will be coming after that. We could do something hopefully special and there’s a new crop of athletes that want to be hockey players. It’s two of probably the best teams ever, maybe, and it’s going to be one unbelievable game.’

The last time USA advanced that far was in 2010, ending with a loss to Canada. Before that, it was 2002, also a loss to Canada. Brock Nelson, however, has family history on which to rely: His grandfather, Bill Christian, was on the 1960 gold medal-winning USA team and his uncle, Dave Christian, was on the famed 1980 championship roster.

‘it sounds kind of crazy but they both really have just said to take it day-by-day and enjoy it and have fun,’ Nelson said. ‘I remember my grandfather saying Squaw Valley is such a different setup, small town. Lake Placid same thing. You see the new documentary when those guys go back there, you see this small village. How crazy it is that they had the Olympics there compared to the setup here. Super fun to have my uncle here to share it and take it all in. Crazy to be in this spot now knowing what he’s accomplished and having the opportunity to do the same thing.”

Nelson and his grandfather text before and after every game. While he has that personal insight, the rest of the players are in on the message. Asked how he would pass the time before the game, which starts at 2:10 p.m. in Milan, Brady Tkachuk planned to do the same thing he’s been doing since the team arrived on Feb. 8.

‘Eat pasta, hang out and, just relax,’ he said. ‘I think if you overthink it, you’re going to miss the fun of it.’

Mike Eruzione, the captain of the 1980 team and the man who scored the game-winning goal against the Soviet Union, has been in Milan and impressed upon the 2026 team what it means to win gold. He sent a message to the women’s team showing his medal, that gold is the color they want. So they did, beating Canada in overtime on Feb. 19. Now it’s the men’s turn to absorb the message.

‘He shared stories and his perspective and everything but mostly he’s said, leave it all out there,’ USA captain Auston Matthews said. ‘This is what you play for, this is what you came here for, to have this opportunity.

‘A gold medal is on stake and that’s a pretty thing, so that’s what the focus is on. Making sure we’re prepared to play and have fun with it and enjoy it. The Olympics come around every four years so it’s something we want to embrace and go have fun with and go leave it all on the ice.’

Similar rosters to the ones here met a year ago at the NHL-organized 4 Nations Face-Off, where USA beat Canada early in the tournament but lost in the final game. The USA hasn’t won gold at the Olympics since 1980, while Canada last won gold in 2014 in Sochi.

‘As Canadians, we take a lot of pride in this sport, and guys that have come before us have done a great job representing the country,’ Connor McDavid said. ‘I think we’ve played good hockey and put ourselves in a good spot to hopefully do the same.

‘The experience has been great. I think the hockey has been amazing.. The level of competition has been amazing. The parity between all the countries has been very good, close games, exciting. Now it comes down to one game.’

As early as the game will be in North America – from 8:10 a.m. ET to 5:10 a.m. PT – Team Canada knows knows what is at stake.

‘We know there’s 40 million people at home on the edge of their seat waiting for this to happen,’ Canada coach Jon Cooper said. ‘I just want everybody to know, it wasn’t easy to get here for either team. I think everybody who thought this was going to happen, or hoping in North America it was going happen, but the Swedes nearly pushed the U.S. out. The Czechs nearly pushed us out. The Finns gave us everything we could handle.

‘So you have to tip your hat to both these teams and say you know what, there was adversity for both these teams to get here. But now we are here. And I think if 4 Nations taught us anything, it’s how beautiful this game is and how intense it is. And if that was the appetizer, I think this is going be the main course, having Olympic medals.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

President Donald Trump will deliver his first official State of the Union address of his second term Tuesday night before a joint session of Congress at the Capitol, as viewers watch for viral moments and headline-grabbing exchanges like those that have defined past speeches.

Here are the top five moments from past State of the Union addresses.

1. Reagan surprises the crowd with first-ever acknowledgment of a guest in the audience

It’s become commonplace in recent years for presidents to acknowledge guests in the audience during SotU addresses, but President Ronald Reagan’s 1982 address was the first time the practice was rolled out. 

Reagan’s speech came just weeks after Air Florida Flight 90 crashed into Washington’s 14th Street Bridge over the Potomac River shortly after taking off in an accident that killed 78 people. 

Three people survived the crash thanks to civilians on the ground who rushed to their aid, including Congressional Budget Office assistant Lenny Skutnik, who stripped off his shoes and clothes and dove into the frigid waters.

Reagan honored Skutnik in his speech, which made honoring people in the crowd a common theme in the years to come. 

‘Just two weeks ago, in the midst of a terrible tragedy on the Potomac, we saw again the spirit of American heroism at its finest — the heroism of dedicated rescue workers saving crash victims from icy waters,’ Reagan said. ‘And we saw the heroism of one of our young government employees, Lenny Skutnik, who, when he saw a woman lose her grip on the helicopter line, dived into the water and dragged her to safety.’

2. Speaker Pelosi tears up Trump’s 2020 speech

Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi sparked a social media firestorm and cemented herself in State of the Union infamy in February 2020 when she stood up and tore Trump’s speech into pieces after he had finished.

When Fox News asked Pelosi afterward why she did it, she responded, ‘Because it was the courteous thing to do considering the alternatives.’ She added, ‘I tore it up. I was trying to find one page with truth on it. I couldn’t.’

Pelosi’s outburst came on the heels of Trump’s first impeachment trial, which ended in a Senate acquittal the day after the speech.

‘Speaker Pelosi just ripped up: One of our last surviving Tuskegee Airmen. The survival of a child born at 21 weeks. The mourning families of Rocky Jones and Kayla Mueller. A service member’s reunion with his family. That’s her legacy,’ the White House tweeted after Pelosi tore up the speech, referencing individuals who Trump mentioned during his address.

3. Rep. Joe Wilson ‘You lie!’ outburst at President Obama

One of the most remembered moments from a State of the Union address came in 2009 when South Carolina Republican Rep. Joe Wilson interrupted President Barack Obama’s address, which at the time was far less common than it later became. 

‘There are also those who claim that our reform effort will insure illegal immigrants,’ Obama said, talking about his controversial Obamacare plan. ‘This, too, is false. The reforms I’m proposing would not apply to those who are here illegally.’

‘You lie!’ Wilson shouted from his seat on the Republican side of the chamber, causing widespread yelling from other members in the audience.

Wilson later apologized to Obama’s chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel. 

‘This evening, I let my emotions get the best of me when listening to the president’s remarks regarding the coverage of illegal immigrants in the health care bill,’ Wilson said in a written statement. ‘While I disagree with the president’s statement, my comments were inappropriate and regrettable. I extend sincere apologies to the president for this lack of civility.’

4. Rep. Boebert heckles Biden over Afghanistan withdrawal during 2022 address

‘You put them in, 13 of them,’ GOP Rep. Lauren Boebert shouted at Biden as he talked about Afghanistan veterans who ended up in caskets due to exposure to toxic burn pits. Boebert was referencing the 13 U.S. service members killed during Biden’s chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021. 

Boebert was wearing an outfit that said ‘Drill Baby Drill’ in opposition to Biden’s energy policies and her outburst drew some boos from the audience.

At another point, Boebert and Greene started chanting ‘build the wall’ when Biden was talking about immigration. 

5. President Biden blasts GOP lawmakers in 2023 address, prompting jeers from Republicans in the crowd

‘Some of my Republican friends want to take the economy hostage — I get it — unless I agree to their economic plans,’ Biden said to Congress, prompting a shake of the head from then-GOP House Speaker Kevin McCarthy in the background and shouts from the crowd and shots of other Republicans shaking their heads. 

‘Instead of making the wealthy pay their fair share, some Republicans, some Republicans, want Medicare and Social Security to sunset,’ Biden continued, which caused an even more pronounced shake of the head from McCarthy, who mouthed ‘no’ as Republicans continued to jeer. 

‘I’m not saying it’s the majority,’ Biden continued, which resulted in even more boos from the raucous crowd. 

‘Let me give you — anybody who doubts it, contact my office. I’ll give you a copy — I’ll give you a copy of the proposal,’ Biden continued to say over increasingly louder shouting from the crowd. 

‘That means Congress doesn’t vote — I’m glad to see — no, I tell you, I enjoy conversion,’ Biden said, apparently meaning to say ‘conversation.’

Biden’s speech continued to devolve from there as Republican outrage interrupted him on multiple occasions. 

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Another day, another strong outing from pre-tournament underdog Jacob Bridgeman. Despite strong performances from the likes of Aldrich Potgieter, Xander Schauffele, and Rory McIlroy on Saturday, Bridgeman is heading into the final round at Riviera Country Club.

Bridgeman has yet to win an event as a PGA Tour pro, but his odds look fantastic heading into Sunday. In fact, he’s been playing some of the best golf of his career in 2026. He’s yet to finish outside the top-20 at any of the five tournaments he’s played in, tied for the longest such streak of his career.

Now, heading into Sunday, Bridgeman has the opportunity to win this event hosted by Tiger Woods. Here’s how to watch the action.

How to watch final round of 2026 Genesis Invitational

  • Start Time: 9:45 a.m. ET
  • TV coverage: 1 – 3 p.m. ET on Golf Channel, 3 – 6:30 p.m. on CBS
  • Streaming: 3 – 6:30 p.m. on Fubo, CBS Sports App

Stream the final round of the Genesis Invitational with Fubo

Genesis Invitational leaderboard

Leaderboard through Saturday’s third round. Keep up with Sunday’s third round in real time.

  • 1 — Jacob Bridgeman: −19
  • 2 — Rory McIlroy: −13
  • 3 — Aldrich Potgieter: -12
  • 4 — Aaron Rai: -11
  • T4 — Xander Schauffele: −10
  • T4 — Kurt Kitayama: −10

Genesis Invitational final round tee times

You can view the full tee times for Sunday’s groups here.

  • Group 1 (10:05 a.m. ET): Sepp Straka
  • Group 2 (10:10 a.m. ET): Matthias Schmid, Brian Harman
  • Group 3 (10:20 a.m. ET): Ryo Hisatsune, Andrew Novak
  • Group 4 (10:30 a.m. ET): Taylor Pendrith, Denny McCarthy
  • Group 5 (10:40 a.m. ET): Rickie Fowler, Sami Valimaki
  • Group 6 (10:50 a.m. ET): Ben Griffin, Viktor Hovland
  • Group 7 (11:00 a.m. ET): Harris English, Jhonattan Vegas
  • Group 8 (11:10 a.m. ET): Corey Conners, Ryan Gerard
  • Group 9 (11:20 a.m. ET): Si Woo Kim, Nick Taylor
  • Group 10 (11:30 a.m. ET): Shane Lowry, Patrick Rodgers
  • Group 11 (11:45 a.m. ET): Max Homa, Hideki Matsuyama
  • Group 12 (11:55 a.m. ET): Ludvig Aberg, Tony Finau
  • Group 13 (12:05 p.m. ET): Sam Stevens, Sahith Theegala
  • Group 14 (12:15 p.m. ET): Min Woo Lee, Matt McCarty
  • Group 15 (12:25 p.m. ET): Tom Kim, Robert MacIntyre
  • Group 16 (12:35 p.m. ET): Matt Fitzpatrick, Scottie Scheffler
  • Group 17 (12:45 p.m. ET): Wyndham Clark, Jordan Spieth
  • Group 18 (12:55 p.m. ET): Pierceson Coody, Collin Morikawa
  • Group 19 (1:05 p.m. ET): Patrick Cantlay, Alex Noren
  • Group 20 (1:15 p.m. ET): Akshay Bhatia, Cameron Young
  • Group 21 (1:30 p.m. ET): Tommy Fleetwood, Adam Scott
  • Group 22 (1:40 p.m. ET): Ryan Fox, Jake Knapp
  • Group 23 (1:50 p.m. ET): Max Greyserman, Marco Penge
  • Group 24 (2:00 p.m. ET): Kurt Kitayama, Xander Schauffele
  • Group 25 (2:10 p.m. ET): Aldrich Potgieter, Aaron Rai
  • Group 26 (2:20 p.m. ET): Jacob Bridgeman, Rory McIlroy
This post appeared first on USA TODAY

MILAN — Even before Ilia Malinin took the ice Saturday night for his confrontational individual gala performance portraying the questions and doubts he harbored during the run-up to the Winter Olympics, he got one big hurdle out of the way.

He landed a quadruple jump — a relatively simple quad toe — as part of the U.S. gold-medal-winning team’s up-beat group exhibition number, then happily punched the air with his right fist.

Normally the act of landing a quad is so routine for the “Quad God” Malinin that it goes without a punctuation mark. But at these Olympic Games, eight days after he fell twice and stumbled across the ice in the men’s long program, dropping to eighth place, Malinin wasn’t taking anything for granted.

He landed another quad toe in his individual performance, and four backflips overall, and was warmly welcomed by the audience at the Milano Ice Skating Arena, which sent him off the ice with a sustained standing ovation when his gala number was over.

Malinin, 21, skated that performance to the music of his favorite artist, the rapper/singer NF, which features a question — ”Is this what you wanted?” — repeated multiple times. Malinin said he has been working on the exhibition number for a “few months,” meaning it was not designed as a specific response to his Olympic struggles.

‘This program was a very emotional piece,’ he said after he skated. ‘This message and this program and song really spoke to me and really represented how I’ve been feeling for the last year leading up to these Olympics. There’s been so much pressure, so much doubt, and everything around me: the noise, the media, the people, the environment, has been so overwhelming, being in this pressure of coming to the Olympics and having a good successful skate.

‘With what happened (here), I’m still very grateful to be here and I want to show to the world that we’re also human beings and we also have real thoughts, real feelings, even though it looks like we’re completely like robots, (with) super-human abilities, but in the end, deep inside, we’re still as similar as all of you.”

While striking a cautionary and at times foreboding tone in the week since his deeply disappointing long program, Malinin also has repeatedly said he “wouldn’t change a thing” about what he has gone through at these Games.

‘I learned so much from these Olympics,” he said, adding he is pleased to now have ‘one Olympics under my belt” so he can ‘understand what I can do differently and have even better strategy” for the next.

Let the record show that he was responsible for clinching the team title for the United States in a riveting, three-day quest for the first gold medal given out in figure skating at these Games. It was believed at the time that by skating both the short and long programs in the team event, Malinin was working through his nerves for what he hoped would be an exquisite men’s event. Obviously, that was not how things turned out.

Since then, he has been back to practicing and hanging out with his American teammates and other skaters in the Olympic Village, with some skating shows on the horizon in Switzerland before returning to his home in the Washington, D.C., suburbs to begin preparing to defend his title at next month’s world championships in Prague.

For all the doubts and concerns that he has, and that so many have about him, he ended one of his interviews in the Olympic mixed zone with a smile and a promise:

‘It’s not the last of me.”

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The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) will suspend TSA PreCheck and Global Entry beginning Sunday as a partial government shutdown continues.

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem on Saturday blamed Democrats for shutting down the government, saying they were causing ‘serious real world consequences.’

‘This is the third time that Democrat politicians have shut down this department during the 119th Congress,’ Noem said in a statement provided to Fox News Digital. ‘Shutdowns have serious real world consequences, not just for the men and women of DHS and their families who go without a paycheck, but it endangers our national security.’

The suspension of the programs, which allow some travelers to quickly get through airport security, was first reported by The Washington Post, which noted the changes would begin Sunday at 6 a.m. EST.

Noem said the department was making ‘tough but necessary workforce and resource decisions to mitigate the damage inflicted by these politicians.’

She said TSA and U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) would be ‘prioritizing the general traveling population at our airports and ports of entry and suspending courtesy and special privilege escorts.’ The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), she added, will halt all non-disaster-related response to prioritize disasters.

Noem noted the suspension comes as a major storm is expected to hit the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast.

Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., ranking member of the House Homeland Security Committee, criticized the Trump administration for ‘idiotically’ shutting down the programs ‘to punish the American people.’

‘This is Trump and Kristi Noem purposely punishing the American people and using them as pawns for their sadistic political games,’ he said in a statement. ‘TSA PreCheck and Global Entry REDUCE airport lines and ease the burden on DHS staff who are working without pay because of Trump’s abuse of the Department and killing of American citizens.’

He called on the administration to immediately reverse the decision.

The third government shutdown in under half a year began on Feb. 14 after Democrats and Republicans were at an impasse on reaching a deal regarding President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown.

DHS was the only department left without federal funding after Democrats walked away from a bipartisan plan released last month in response to the deaths of two U.S. citizens at the hands of federal law enforcement agents in Minneapolis during anti-ICE demonstrations.

DHS is the third-largest Cabinet agency with nearly 272,000 employees. Roughly 90% of DHS workers were expected to continue working, many without pay, according to the department’s Sept. 2025 government shutdown plan.

DHS has jurisdiction over numerous agencies and offices, including CBP, TSA, FEMA, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), the U.S. Coast Guard, and the U.S. Secret Service.

Fox News Digital’s Elizabeth Elkind and Alex Miller contributed to this report.

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